One thing I’ve started noticing while reading about OpenGradient is how quickly our expectations change once AI becomes dependable. 🤔
The first few times something works really well, it feels impressive.
After that, it quietly becomes what we expect.
I’ve caught myself doing exactly that.
If an AI responds smoothly, I barely think about it.
But the one time something feels slow, interrupted, or inconsistent…..it stands out immediately. 😅
The more I read about OpenGradient, the more I realized that reliable AI infrastructure isn’t only about making requests faster.
It’s about making the experience dependable enough that people stop thinking about everything happening behind the scenes.
The interesting part is that this also changes how we judge AI.
At first, we notice the speed.
Later, we notice the consistency.
And eventually, we stop thinking about either of them.
We simply expect the experience to be there whenever we need it.
I don’t think that’s a flaw.
I think it’s what happens whenever technology becomes reliable enough to earn our trust without asking for our attention.
Maybe that’s where AI is heading too.
In a few years, we probably won’t remember which AI system gave us the fastest response.
We’ll remember the one we never had to question in the first place.
Curious to see how OpenGradient continues building toward that kind of future. 🙂
@OpenGradient #opg $OPG
The first few times something works really well, it feels impressive.
After that, it quietly becomes what we expect.
I’ve caught myself doing exactly that.
If an AI responds smoothly, I barely think about it.
But the one time something feels slow, interrupted, or inconsistent…..it stands out immediately. 😅
The more I read about OpenGradient, the more I realized that reliable AI infrastructure isn’t only about making requests faster.
It’s about making the experience dependable enough that people stop thinking about everything happening behind the scenes.
The interesting part is that this also changes how we judge AI.
At first, we notice the speed.
Later, we notice the consistency.
And eventually, we stop thinking about either of them.
We simply expect the experience to be there whenever we need it.
I don’t think that’s a flaw.
I think it’s what happens whenever technology becomes reliable enough to earn our trust without asking for our attention.
Maybe that’s where AI is heading too.
In a few years, we probably won’t remember which AI system gave us the fastest response.
We’ll remember the one we never had to question in the first place.
Curious to see how OpenGradient continues building toward that kind of future. 🙂
@OpenGradient #opg $OPG